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Sunday, December 22, 2024

PCIe 7.0 quadruples the bandwidth of today’s fastest PCs

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Although we’ve barely begun the PCI Express 5.0 (PCIe Gen 5) generation, the PCI Special Interest Group is already looking ahead. Beginning in 2025, you can expect the PCIe 7.0 specification to be finalized, the group said Tuesday.

PCI Express is the fundamental I/O standard that, on the PC, governs two key components: the discrete GPU, as well as the system’s SSD. Both components are continually improving, requiring ever-faster bandwidth that the PCI Express standard provides.

PCI Express 7.0 will continue the current trend, doubling the PCI Express 6.0 bandwidth from 64 gigatransfers (256GB/s) per second to 128 gigatransfers per second (512GB/s), bi-directionally and via a x16 interface. PCIe 7.0 will also be backwards-compatible with prior generations of the technology, the SIG said.

Because of the nature of how specifications are crafted, published, and then implemented in silicon, specification development often precedes the actual market presence of certified products by years. PCI Express 5.0, for example, was announced in May 2019, but was first introduced in finished products as part of Intel’s current 12th-gen “Alder Lake” processors late last year. (It offers 128GB/s bi-directional speeds.)

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